There is a lot of good information about that on the web, just google for 
'ubuntu performance monitor'

Also the ubuntu website has a pretty good help section:

        https://help.ubuntu.com/

and a community wiki:

        https://help.ubuntu.com/community

Cheers

François

On Jun 19, 2012, at 9:03 AM, Bruno Mannina wrote:

> Linux Ubuntu :) since 2 months ! so I'm a new in this world :)
> 
> Le 19/06/2012 15:01, François Schiettecatte a écrit :
>> Well that depends on the platform you are on, you did not mention that.
>> 
>> If you are using linux, you could use atop ( http://www.atoptool.nl/ ), or 
>> top, or  iostat or stat, or all four.
>> 
>> Cheers
>> 
>> François
>> 
>> On Jun 19, 2012, at 8:55 AM, Bruno Mannina wrote:
>> 
>>> CPU is not used, just 50-60% sometimes during the process but How can I 
>>> check IO HDD ?
>>> 
>>> Le 19/06/2012 14:13, François Schiettecatte a écrit :
>>>> Just a suggestion, you might want to monitor CPU usage and disk I/O, there 
>>>> might be a bottleneck.
>>>> 
>>>> Cheers
>>>> 
>>>> François
>>>> 
>>>> On Jun 19, 2012, at 7:07 AM, Bruno Mannina wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> Actually -Xmx512m and no effect
>>>>> 
>>>>> Concerning  maxFieldLength, no problem it's commented
>>>>> 
>>>>> Le 19/06/2012 13:02, Erick Erickson a écrit :
>>>>>> Then try -Xmx600M
>>>>>> next try -Xmx900M
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> etc. The idea is to bump things on separate runs.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> But be a little cautious here. Look in your solrconfig.xml file, you'll 
>>>>>> see
>>>>>> a commented-out line
>>>>>> <maxFieldLength>10000</maxFieldLength>
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> The default behavior for Solr/Lucene is to index the first 10,000 tokens
>>>>>> (not characters, think of tokens as words for not) in each
>>>>>> document and throw the rest on the floor. At the sizes you're talking 
>>>>>> about,
>>>>>> that's probably not a problem, but do be aware of it.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Best
>>>>>> Erick
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 5:44 AM, Bruno Mannina<bmann...@free.fr>    
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>> Like that?
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> java -Xmx300m -jar post.jar myfile.xml
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Le 19/06/2012 11:11, Lance Norskog a écrit :
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Ah! Java memory size is a java command line option:
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> http://javahowto.blogspot.com/2006/06/6-common-errors-in-setting-java-heap.html
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> You would try increasing the memory size in stages up to maybe 300m.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 2:04 AM, Bruno Mannina<bmann...@free.fr>      
>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>> Le 19/06/2012 10:51, Lance Norskog a écrit :
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>> 675 doc/s is respectable for that server. You might move the memory
>>>>>>>>>> allocated to Java up and down- there is a balance between amount of
>>>>>>>>>> memory in Java v.s. the OS disk buffer.
>>>>>>>>> How can I do that ? is there an option during my command line or in a
>>>>>>>>> config
>>>>>>>>> file?
>>>>>>>>> sorry for this newbie question :(
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>> And, of course, use the latest trunk.
>>>>>>>>> Solr 3.6
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>> On Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 12:10 AM, Bruno Mannina<bmann...@free.fr>
>>>>>>>>>>  wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> Correction: file size is 40 Mo !!!
>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>> Le 19/06/2012 09:09, Bruno Mannina a écrit :
>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> Dear All,
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> I would like to know if the indexation speed is right.
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> I have a 40Go file size with around 27 000 docs inside.
>>>>>>>>>>>> I index around 20 fields,
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> My (old) test server is a DualCore 3.06GHz Intel Xeon with only 1Go
>>>>>>>>>>>> Ram
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> The file takes 40 seconds with the command line:
>>>>>>>>>>>> java -jar post.jar myfile.xml
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> Could I increase this speed or reduce this time?
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks a lot,
>>>>>>>>>>>> PS: Newbie user
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>> 
>> 
>> 
> 

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